Have you got any questions for the IBM team that created Watson, the world's first computerized Jeopardy champion? Well, now's your chance. IBM's engineering team behind the Jeopardy super computer will be answering the ten most popular Watson-themed questions submitted to this thread at Reddit.com on Tuesday, February 22 at noon Eastern. The answers will be posted on Reddit's blog as well as Reddit's r/IAmA section.

What is Reddit?

Reddit is a community-driven social news/question-and-answer site where users can post news links or submit their own questions and comments to be answered by others. Similar to Digg, all posts can be commented on and users can also vote them up or down. In the case of the Watson questions, the more popular a post is, the more likely it is to get answered.

Here's a look at the top 10 questions submitted to Reddit at the time of this writing:

1. Can we have Watson itself/himself do an AMA?

2. Could you give an example of a question (or question style) that Watson would always struggle with?

3. What was the biggest technological hurdle you had to overcome in the development of Watson?

4. What operating system does Watson use? What language is he written in?

5. What is your timeline to bringing a miniature or cloud version of Watson's natural language processing to the common consumer?

6. Are you pleased with Watson's performance on Jeopardy!? Is it what you were expecting?

7. In the time it takes a human to even know they are hearing something (about .2 seconds) Watson has already read the question and done several million computations. It's got a huge head start. Do you agree or disagree with that assessment?

8. Will Watson ever be available public [sic] on the Internet?

9. Can you walk us through the logic Watson would go through to answer a question such as, "The antagonist of Stevenson's Treasure Island." (Who is Long John Silver?)

10. How did Watson compute how much to wager on the Daily Doubles and the final clue?

Think you've got a better question? Submit it to Reddit and try to get it voted into the top 10 before next Tuesday.

In the meantime, be sure to check out the threads on some of these questions for a lively discussion about America's favorite pile of silicon and plastic: Watson.